Tam o'shanter (hat)

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This article is about the hat called a 'tam o' shanter'. For the poem by Robert Burns, see Tam o' Shanter (Burns poem).
This article is about the hat called a 'tam o' shanter'. For the golf course in Niles, Illinois, see Tam O'Shanter Golf Course.

See

Various tartan tam o'shanters.
Various tartan tam o'shanters.

A tam o'shanter is a Scottish bonnet worn by men which was named after the character Tam o' Shanter in the poem of that name by Robert Burns. The bonnet is made of wool with a toorie (pompon) in the centre, and the crown is about twice the diameter of the head. Originally they were only made in blue because of the lack of chemical dyes, and were called Bluebonnets. They are now available in plain colors or in different tartans.

A form of Tam o'shanter called the "General Service Cap" was worn during World War II by the infantry regiments of the British and Canadian armies instead of berets (which were made standard in the postwar years). They were plain khaki in colour and were stiffer than civilian tam o'shanters. Today, the Scottish Division and some regiments of the Canadian Forces continue to wear the Tam o' Shanter (abbreviated to TOS) as their 'battle headdress', it has a narrower, flat crown, with Highland battalions shaping theirs sloping down from back to front and the Lowland battalions wearing theirs with the excess material pulled to the right side, similar to a beret.


Tam o'Shanter (TOS) headdress, as worn by the Royal Highland Fusiliers Battalion of the Royal Regiment of Scotland
Tam o'Shanter (TOS) headdress, as worn by the Royal Highland Fusiliers Battalion of the Royal Regiment of Scotland

The different battalions of the Royal Regiment of Scotland identify themselves by wearing distinctively coloured hackles on their tam o'shanters, and soldiers of The Black Watch of Canada wear a red hackle on both their duty tam o'shanters and dress balmorals.

Some regiments of the Canadian Army wear different coloured toories: the Royal Highland Fusiliers of Canada have traditionally worn dark green; The North Nova Scotia Highlanders wore red toories during the Second World War; and the Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders wore blue. Most regiments wear a khaki toorie, matching the hat.

In many regiments, it is traditional for soldiers to wear a tam o'shanter, while officers (and in some cases senior non-commissioned officers) wear the Balmoral or Glengarry instead.

Dr. Stephen W. Kress of National Audubon Society's Seabird Restoration Program/Project Puffin (and also the professor for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's annual Spring Field Ornithology Course) is known for wearing his tam o'shanter during Audubon and other field trip outings. See: http://www.projectpuffin.org/SWKlectures.html


[edit] Trivia

Contemporary woodcut showing Tam wearing his bonnet and sitting astride his horse Meg.
Contemporary woodcut showing Tam wearing his bonnet and sitting astride his horse Meg.
  • Queen's University in Kingston, ON, Canada has a tradition of providing every first-year student with a tam when they first enter the university. Each faculty has its own coloured pompom on the top. This tradition reflects the school's Scottish origins.
  • The Trashcan Sinatras song "Hayfever" references Tam o'shanters with its line "Should I put my tammy in the ring and run for President?"

[edit] See also